O'Reilly in particular laments the loss given that the Google Search API is the "cannonical SOAP example". Google just obsoleted a whole bunch of O'Reilly books...

Google is proving that when they say Beta, they MEAN Beta. Even when a Beta runs for an extended period of time. Beware of depending on Google Beta features!

(But doesn't this go beyond the definition of "Beta"? My understanding has always been that "Beta" software is software that is undergoing extended user testing prior to final release. Google seems now to be treating Beta software as a sandbox. A rug that they can feel free to pull at a momemt's notice.)

On December 5th, we stopped accepting new sign-ups for the Google SOAP Search API. This change does not impact current users of the SOAP Search API -- you can continue to execute queries, and we have no plans to turn off the service in the future....

...While the AJAX Search API does not provide server-side access to search results, it has a number of more powerful features, including access to Video, Maps, Blog Search, and News search results.

Senior Member

joined:Feb 27, 2001
posts:2548
votes: 0

My first thought is that as long as the search API's are unreliable and extremely limited in the amount of queries allowed people will continue to screen-scrape to get their SERP fix. IMO it would be better for Google to keep accepting applicaitons for the SOAP API (and increase the allowed requests per day). Not saying they shouldn't develop new APIs but might as well keep supporting the old one out of respect for people who put time/money into developing code based on it. Even though they will keep supporting the SOAP API (for now - we have no plans to turn off the service does not mean it won't happen arbitrarily soon) any code based on the SOAP API that is for sale (or open source) becomes basically worthless since a new client can't get a new API key.

Junior Member

joined:May 5, 2005
posts:111
votes: 0

If you still need SOAP access for your app, but you don't want to rely on the (unreliable and deprecated) Google SOAP Search API, there's now open source code available (using the MIT license) called EvilAPI. It of course relies on scraping.

Junior Member

joined:May 5, 2005
posts:111
votes: 0

it looks like Google doesn't plan to discontinue their API entirely for the time being.

They stopped issuing API keys, which is a huge issue for services like the one I offer, because the user has to provide their own API key. They've discontinued support and simply haven't turned the power off yet, so it's basically over.